Premium
The Role of Solvent on the Mechanism of Proton Transfer to Hydride Complexes: The Case of the [W 3 PdS 4 H 3 (dmpe) 3 (CO)] + Cubane Cluster
Author(s) -
Algarra Andrés G.,
Basallote Manuel G.,
Feliz Marta,
FernándezTrujillo M. Jesús,
Llusar Rosa,
Safont Vicent S.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.200902233
Subject(s) - chemistry , hydride , dichloromethane , acetonitrile , solvent , proton , cluster (spacecraft) , adduct , molecule , reaction mechanism , computational chemistry , photochemistry , inorganic chemistry , hydrogen , organic chemistry , catalysis , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , programming language
The kinetics of reaction of the [W 3 PdS 4 H 3 (dmpe) 3 (CO)] + hydride cluster ( 1 + ) with HCl has been measured in dichloromethane, and a second‐order dependence with respect to the acid is found for the initial step. In the presence of added BF 4 − the second‐order dependence is maintained, but there is a deceleration that becomes more evident as the acid concentration increases. DFT calculations indicate that these results can be rationalized on the basis of the mechanism previously proposed for the same reaction of the closely related [W 3 S 4 H 3 (dmpe) 3 ] + cluster, which involves parallel first‐ and second‐order pathways in which the coordinated hydride interacts with one and two acid molecules, and ion pairing to BF 4 − hinders formation of dihydrogen bonded adducts able to evolve to the products of proton transfer. Additional DFT calculations are reported to understand the behavior of the cluster in neat acetonitrile and acetonitrile–water mixtures. The interaction of the HCl molecule with CH 3 CN is stronger than the WH⋅⋅⋅HCl dihydrogen bond and so the reaction pathways operating in dichloromethane become inefficient, in agreement with the lack of reaction between 1 + and HCl in neat acetonitrile. However, the attacking species in acetonitrile–water mixtures is the solvated proton, and DFT calculations indicate that the reaction can then go through pathways involving solvent attack to the W centers, while still maintaining the coordinated hydride, which is made possible by the capability of the cluster to undergo structural changes in its core.